Cuba Freed A Popular Hip-Hop Artist And 35 Other Activists

Thomson ReutersMan walks near a sign with an image of Cuban President Raul Castro in Havana

One of Cuba’s most prominent dissident groups said on Friday that 36 opposition activists, including a popular hip-hop artist, have been freed in the last two days as part of a deal to improve relations between Cuba and the United States.

The dissident Patriotic Union of Cuba (UNPACU) said 29 of its members were among those released, and that most had been warned by the communist government they would be sent back to prison if they continued their opposition activities.

“Our freed prisoners are committed to continue fighting for the democratic Cuba which we all want,” UNPACU’s leader Jose Daniel Ferrer said in a statement.

“The UNPACU activists have left prison with more energy, force and motivation than they had when they were jailed.”

Cuba’s commitment to free 53 prisoners was a key part of the historic deal announced on Dec. 17 under which the Cuban and U.S. governments agreed to renew diplomatic relations after more than 50 years of hostilities.

Almost all of those freed so far appear on an informal list of political prisoners drawn up several months ago by dissidents, but it is not known if they were all on the list of 53 that the United States negotiated with Cuba.

Details about who will be freed have been withheld by both governments, providing ammunition for U.S. opponents of the detente, who have complained that President Barack Obama has not pushed Cuba hard enough on human rights and that the government in Havana was not living up to its side of the bargain.

The White House hailed the releases.

“The United States welcomes the substantial and ongoing releases of prisoners in Cuba,” senior White Houseofficial Ben Rhodes said on Twitter on Friday.

‘KEEP BATTLING’

Most of those released over the last two days were accused of such offenses as resisting arrest and threatening police officers, and had been given short sentences of two to five years.

The hip-hop artist, Angel Yunier Remon, known as “The Critic”, was serving the longest prison term, eight years.

Remon was arrested in 2013 after painting a giant slogan, “Down With The Dictatorship!”, on the street outside his home in the eastern city of Bayamo. He staged several hunger strikes while behind bars, and said he contracted cholera due to the unsanitary prison conditions.

“I’m so happy to be back with my family, my children, and my wife,” Remon told Reuters by telephone from Bayamoon Friday morning, adding that he had no plans to give up working for the opposition.

“Our country is still a dictatorship,” he said. “We’re going to keep battling for an independent and truly free Cuba.”

Others who were freed include Angel Figueredo and Haydee Gallardo, a married couple arrested last year after shouting anti-government slogans at a rally.

“I still can’t believe it,” Gallardo, a member of the “Ladies in White” dissident group, told Reuters in an interview at her home in Havana, sobbing with emotion.

Opposition groups say most of those released over the past couple of days were set free on the condition that they report regularly to the authorities.

Leading dissidents have complained that the U.S. government kept them in the dark over which cases it was pushing for.

Cuba’s government does not comment on police actions involving detentions, and it has said nothing about this week’s releases. It says there are no political prisoners in Cuba and typically describes dissidents as “mercenaries” in the pay of the United States.

Several Cuban exiles from Miami are in Cuban prisons with sentences of up to 30 years on terrorism-related charges after they attempted to infiltrate the island with weapons.

They are believed to be in custody still and it is not clear if the U.S. government argued for their release or for the freedom of Cubans jailed for passing secrets to the United States.

The top U.S. diplomat for Latin America, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Roberta Jacobson, is due to visit Havana on Jan. 21-22 for talks with Cuban officials on the normalization of diplomatic ties and migration issues.